Yutori has raised $15.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Yutori's investors include 8VC, AAF Management Ltd., AI4ALL, AirAngels, Alt Capital, Amplify Partners, Artisanal Ventures, Awesome People Ventures, Axiom Partners, Balderton Capital, Benchmark, Citi Ventures.
Yutori is a San Francisco-based AI startup building autonomous web agents—personal AI assistants that execute complex, multi-step digital tasks like ordering groceries, booking travel, scheduling meetings, and handling transactions without human intervention.[1][2][3][4] Founded by AI veterans from Meta, it serves individuals and enterprises seeking to automate mundane web interactions, solving the problem of unreliable LLM chatbots that can't reliably act in the real world by innovating across the full stack with post-training foundation models, multi-agent systems, reinforcement learning, and model-in-the-loop flywheels.[1][3][4] Backed by a $15 million seed round led by Radical Ventures (with Felicis, Elad Gil, Fei-Fei Li, Jeff Dean, and others), Yutori's agent-first approach delivers "superhuman" performance, positioning it as a "chief of staff for everyone" to boost productivity.[1][2][3][4]
Yutori was founded in 2024 by Abhishek Das (Co-founder and Co-CEO), Devi Parikh (Co-founder and Co-CEO), and Dhruv Batra (Co-founder and Chief Scientist), who collectively bring nearly 50 years of AI research experience from Meta (including Llama 3 and 4 at FAIR), Google, DeepMind, Stanford, CMU, Georgia Tech, and others.[1][2][4] These former Meta AI leaders identified the gap in current AI: chatbots excel at conversation but fail at autonomous task execution on the dynamic web, prompting them to launch with $15 million in seed funding led by Radical Ventures, plus backers like Fei-Fei Li and Jeff Dean.[2][4] Early traction came from their deep technical pedigree, quickly attracting top talent (e.g., from Tesla Autopilot, Palantir) and investors betting on their expertise in multi-agent systems and web navigation models.[3][4]
Yutori rides the agentic AI wave, where AI shifts from reactive chat to proactive execution amid exploding demand for automation in a web-dominated world of fragmented apps and services.[1][3] Timing is ideal post-Llama advancements, as foundation models mature for post-training into reliable agents, fueled by market forces like consumer fatigue with manual digital drudgery and enterprises seeking process efficiency.[2][4] By solving web navigation—a "genuinely hard technical problem"—Yutori influences the ecosystem, potentially standardizing agent infrastructure and enabling new products that "operate the web for you," amplifying human focus on high-value work.[3][4]
Yutori is poised to lead web agent adoption, expanding from personal assistants to enterprise-grade automation with its full-stack innovation and powerhouse team.[1][4] Trends like multimodal AI, open-source flywheels, and regulatory pushes for trustworthy agents will accelerate its trajectory, potentially capturing a slice of the $trillions in digital labor markets.[3] Its influence could evolve into the backbone of "background web" interactions, truly delivering a chief of staff for everyone and reimagining human-AI partnership.[1][4]
Yutori has raised $15.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $15.0M Seed in March 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 1, 2025 | $15.0M Seed | 8VC, AAF Management Ltd., AI4ALL, AirAngels, Alt Capital, Amplify Partners, Artisanal Ventures, Awesome People Ventures, Axiom Partners, Balderton Capital, Benchmark, Citi Ventures, Conviction Partners, Earl Grey Capital, Felicis Ventures, First Round Capital, Founders Fund, Goat Capital, Gradient Ventures, Greylock, ICONIQ Capital, Insight Partners, LGF, Madrona Ventures, Not Boring Capital, Kazuma Ieiri, Radical Ventures, Redpoint Ventures, Reshape Ventures, Saga, Scribble Ventures, Summit Partners, Supercharge.vc, Theory Ventures, Unusual Ventures, Vibe Capital, Y Combinator, Akshay Kothari, Allison Pickens (Allison Pickens Ventures), Amjad Masad, Christian Reber, Dylan Field, Emil Michael, Gokul Rajaram, Guillermo Rauch, James Beshara, Jason Citron, Jason Gardner, Oliver Cameron, Ron Pragides, Sam Altman, Scott Belsky, Thomas Dohmke |